I do not own Warcraft or its sequels. Yogg-Saron and Tsa'Thannon do.

Chapter crawled forth from the shivering wind on 7/16/16.


Yogg-Saron

Days passed.

Then weeks.

Then months.

To its Titan-born residents, Azeroth was unrecognizable. Under the power of Therazane and her earth elementals, the landscape was a constantly shifting mass of stone. Sometimes the masses aligned so that the planet was speckled with islands. Sometimes there were massive continents of wildly varying shape and number, broken intermittently with volcanoes and lava flows. Sometimes the world was mostly subsumed by oceans. Sometimes there was hardly any water left. Beaches of sand, canyons, mountain ranges, uprooted hills levitating in the atmosphere. It all shifted unpredictably.

The air was similarly chaotic. Sometimes it was calm and still. Sometimes the wind threatened to rip flesh from bone. Waterspouts, tornadoes, hurricanes, storms and more raged across the land at the whims of the Old Gods, painting the red sky with white clouds. The oceans varied wildly between combinations of calm and wild, salt and fresh, freezing and boiling.

The Black Empire was once again established. Unnatural metals were unearthed and used to build structures of unique designs that could withstand the rampant changes of environment. Vast citadels spread across the earth like cancer. The n'raqi, mantid and qiraji joined together in placing beneath them the races they had sought to subjugate for so long. Rivers of darkness shrouded the world; nothing was untouched.

Currently, Yogg-Saron's true from rested in its colossal throne at the north pole. Its vast consciousness was split across many tasks. Savoring the souls it received via sacrifice. Singling out mortals to give its personal attention, and more. One part of its awareness was focused on an avatar.

The troll man it created was on one of the floating hills, at the upper part of the planet's atmosphere. Purple light flared around 'his' feet as he slid down the hill's thick snowy covering.

Red snow, because why stick with white if you could change things?

He skied down the floating, tumbling slopes, Tsa'Thannon's tauren woman avatar behind him. She was closing in alarmingly fast, but he was almost at the edge. Yogg-Saron pondered what to do rapidly. He still had two of his allotted concussive blasts, but he'd save that for later.

His avatar's skin prickled, and he ducked, descending into a split as Tsa'Thannon sent a blast of compressed air through where his head had been just a moment ago.

"That's two down!" he jeered, accelerating forward and off the edge of the floating rock. Crimson powder followed after him as he tumbled, high above the world, with Tsa'Thannon right behind him.

Weightlessness overtook him. He took a moment to take in the view. Azeroth extended all around, and they were so high up he could see the curvature of the world, and the reddish air far below. Stormclouds, in giant anvil shapes, clung just above the land, crackling with electricity and casting shadows beneath. Lesser clouds dotted the airspace between them, everything from wispy cirrus to dense sheets of stratus. In the distance was a hurricane, enormous and smooth. From so high up it appeared stationary.

The oceans were blue and filled with the white froth of waves. Land dotted the waters. The portion of Azeroth they were over currently had a series of small islands dotting it. Connecting them were black wires – bridges from up close – and each island was a multitude of colors. Purple, green, neon orange, whatever fungi, plants, microbes and animals that Yogg-Saron and Tsa'Thannon decided to cook up.

There was also Tsa'Thannon's body in the distance. The colossal gray starfish-like creature was flush against the ground, contending with the hurricane in size. Spikes rose up past Yogg-Saron's avatar and straight out of the atmosphere. Even from this distance, the troll avatar could see its millions of tentacles waving about.

Then gravity took control again, and Yogg-Saron's sightseeing came to an abrupt end. He went plummeting down onto the next snow-covered floating rock, Tsa'Thannon right behind him.

The two of them continued to ski, blasting each other with the various allotted magics. In this case, some restrictions were allowed. They were not rules of a society to follow, made to restrict him and keep him from unleashing what he could really do. They were the rules of a game, restrictions put in place to test them, push them, make them think and plan and be surprised by what the other planned.

Rock by rock, drift by drift, they lowered. The atmosphere screamed around them, going so fast it felt like they'd ignite into shooting stars. Yogg-Saron laughed, then his laughter was cut off when Tsa'Thannon's final concussive blast caught him in the side, sending him into a rock so hard he left a crater. He recovered, only to find the 'tauren woman' had already skied off the rock and into the air, vanishing into a cloudbank.

He growled, pulled himself out and followed, plunging into the fluffy vapor. The moment he did, wild winds blasted him to the side so hard his avatar nearly threw up. The disorientation was… fascinating. He had no idea which way was up or down!

Eventually, the droplets stinging his eyes gave way to open skies. Ahead, he could see Tsa'Thannon's avatar plummeting for the next rock like a comet. The rocks had been uprooted at random and tossed into the air haphazardly with no concern for making a path. They'd play it by the ear. After all, even if the avatars could feel pain, the Old Gods themselves were functionally invincible.

Tsa'Thannon was getting awfully close to making landfall, though. Yogg-Saron had used up all his concussive blasts, but he still had a few fireballs and frostwalls saved up for this occasion. He waved his hand and a wall of frozen water appeared before Tsa'Thannon… but by then he was moving so fast he just shot right through it.

"Oh no," he said. Yogg-Saron threw out his remaining spells, forcing the tauren to weave between fireballs and crash through ice barriers, but it wasn't enough. The choppy waters of the sea grow closer and closer, enough so that Yogg-Saron could make out the individual waves. Tsa'Thannon landed first, flipping over and landing on one knee as though the ocean was solid ground. The shockwave was strong enough to send the water sailing back, leaving a short lived ring of calm.

Yogg-Saron touched down a full ten seconds later in bitter defeat, his landing releasing a similar shockwave. He turned towards Tsa'Thannon, frowning. "Well, you got me," he admitted. On a whim he turned the ocean beneath her into a liquid again and she sunk, then came back up soaked.

He only had to wonder what her revenge would be for a moment before the water around him turned to a shark mouth and chopped his avatar in two.

In a flash he summoned another, this time an n'raqi avatar that towered over the tauren. "So," Tsa'Thannon said. "I think I'm going to finish up that puzzle I'm building."

"I'm going to…" Yogg-Saron spun a wheel in its mind. "… just drift around in an avatar." The faceless avatar floated up and collapsed into that of human-Sara, with the trademark glowing eyes. "See you later."

"Indeed," the other replied.

Then 'Sara' zipped away, floating on magic and hopelessness, heading north away from Tsa'Thannon's mountainous body, writhing and squirming on the horizon. The air was filled with silver streaks streaming towards it, souls that had been sacrificed to the other deity.

As Sara flew, she sighed, looking around in contentment. This was… nice. She enjoyed this. She drifted past a few black spires, atop which n'raqi generals – c'thrax – stood, bellowing orders. She turned the other way and saw a massive spire of black and gold amber. Extending her sensors inside she saw the mantid, working furiously on rebuilding their numbers, and as the eggs hatched the newborns were instantly sent into battle… against some mortal thralls. There was also a massive hive buried into the land, filled to the brim with silithid and qiraji, going about their business of slave mining.

"Hmm." Sara drifted straight down, passing through stone and sediment, through flowing veins of liquid gold and mercury. The pressure mounted and the temperature rose. Soon, Sara arrived, invisible, in a tunnel within the mantle of the world. The air shimmered with temperature in the hundreds of degrees, and the walls glowed a dull reddish-brown.

There were miners here, members of the Titans' world standing barefoot with solid iron sickles in their hands, kept alive and intact by way of magic. Not that it did anything to repel the sensation of burning itself. As they dug, finding golden veins and chunks of lead, a qiraji gladiator stood, one of his pincers holding a shimmering blue orb. He was protected entirely from the heat.

Sara allowed herself to become visible, exuding an eldritch aura that left no doubt as to her identity. "I feel," she said in Common, and it was so rare for her to use that language that the novelty struck her in the chest. "… that you all may be getting used to this heat." They shivered but didn't dare look her way, didn't dare stop their work. "Time for a change." She twisted a hand and the glowing heat instantly vanished.

Liquid nitrogen appeared from nothingness and flooded the room, steaming and cracking the stone with far less intensity than it would otherwise. Screams of pain filled the air as various mortals were stabbed with flakes of stone. Darkness consumed the tunnel. In time, the liquid nitrogen would vaporize and the planet's heat would flow in. Until then, they wouldn't freeze and they wouldn't drown. Bleeding out however, or disappointing the qiraji and having him kill them, was still on the table.

Sara vanished again, leaving them to their fate. She ascended rapidly, floating through the air on a whim and a breeze, taking in the sights.

She could still hardly believe it. She'd actually done it. Hardly a year ago, her greatest ambition was to be an Archmage, to spend her remaining sixty or so years of life holed up in a room doing research. And look at her now! The God of Death, co-ruler of an entire planet. All powerful. All seeing – that was C'Thun's title – and immortal. All her prior ambitions seemed so… fleeting. Like jokes.

She had to admit though… she was a little worried about the future. Not in the way of her life and limb and freedom but still. It was just her and Tsa'Thannon now. Leira, locked in a hallucination of being a hero, didn't count. Her previous incarnation's parents were out of the equation. And with just one Old God, however chaotic they were and however creative they were, eventually they were going to have to run out of options.

Eventually, they were going to be bored.

That was the problem with a life that extended to infinity. Eventually they'd see every possible combination of atoms there was to see, and then what? Just go to sleep in a lower plane for the rest of time? Keep rehashing the same old same old forever? Not just a long time, but truly forever? Not a million years. Not a trillion, or a googolplex, or any of the absurdly high numbers that mathematics could compute. Forever. Void, that boredom problem may manifest sooner rather than later…

Bah, that was future Yogg-Saron's problem.

Standing in the middle of the air, she moved her arms in circular patterns. Fireballs, icicles, shadow bolts and more appeared, rotating closer to her. They spun around and she extended her hands, enlarging their orbits. Then she cupped both hands together, world-shaking violet magic pooling within.

The magic faded and suddenly Sara's avatar was yanked over to its true body. There was one feature left over from Northrend. A mountain, incorporated into the tip of its throne. On it were, just as it had left them, the four Aspects, impaled through the chest and trapped in various, shifting nightmare scenarios. Sara flew over to Alexstrasza and opened her mouth.

The former Dragonqueen twitched in agony as the essence of her soul was torn off, white strands and streamers flowing from her scales and into Sara's mouth. Even though it was just a projection made of magic, she still shivered in ecstasy. She drained off of Nozdormu, Kalecgos and Ysera as well, taking more and more. It was like cotton candy, sweet and fluffy. It was like beef stew, savory and thick. It was everything she could have ever wanted and more, so she drained power from the magical Hearts until the Aspects died, then she brought them back and continued to feast like the glutton she could afford being. Eventually, the god had her fill and left them be.

Floating just aside the mountain was an orb of swarming wasps. Sara snapped her fingers. Now it was an orb of dense, searing smoke. The occupant wasn't visible, but the orb did fluctuate as Wrathion struggled within. He thought he was 'free' of the Old Gods? That having a little Titan tech waved over him as an egg would make him untouchable?

Hilarious. She ground her teeth – and her true body its many fangs – in anger just thinking about it, and sent another spike of searing pain to the black drake trapped within the sphere.

No. Calm. There was no need to be angry. Everything was right. Everything was as it should be. Maybe it'd pay a visit to some dragons worth keeping around. She soared away from the Aspects at supersonic speeds, busting through clouds and tearing through wind currents. It took a few laps around the globe, but she found where the new Dragonfall Temple had drifted.

Dragonfall Temple was an open and unashamed mockery of Wyrmrest. It clung to the underside of a floating boulder, upside down so that the Dragonking's chamber was on the lowest floor. The metal was, instead of silver and bronze, putrid black snapsteel and dark saronite. Parts of it had also been corrupted into flesh by Tsa'Thannon, covered in glowing yellow eyes. Dark blue forms flew around the island as it drifted in the breeze, suspended high above the clouds.

Sara hovered into the lowest room, where Revalion sat on his haunches at the inverted dome forming the 'floor'. Pillars of betentacled flesh surrounded them. Around the dragon's hind legs were spires of black stone, shooting up around him and forming a throne. Shackled to it was one female dragon of each Flight save for Bronze. There was even a fellow Twilight; Oediona, Revalion's challenger. They'd taken the liberty of reviving her and uncorrupting her mind. There were some other dragons around, twilight drakes and twilight dragonspawn but none of them were of any importance. Some meeting with Revalion or other. Whatever.

"Well, well, well," she said, floating in on Revalion. The dragons all gasped and fell into bows, trembling in fear of invoking Yogg-Saron's wrath. The Twilight Aspect was no exception. Quietly, Sara nodded to herself. Good, good. They knew their place. "Revalion, up." In a flash, the twilights which had been meeting with the Aspect about some hidden mortal camp or other were teleported randomly around the globe.

Revalion raised his head. "Yes, O' Great One?" he asked quietly.

"First off, we didn't give you this temple so you could lounge about it all the time, nor did we give you power surpassing a Titan Aspect's just so you could use it to look scary and rape your consorts. Get out there, start maiming, or helping, or whatever whim takes hold. Show your lessers exactly what you think of them."

He trembled. "Understood, master. Get outside Dragonfall, exercise my power on the lesser beings."

"Exactly." She stepped closer, warping space so that his shackled consorts were far away, enlarging her avatar so that she towered over the dragon.

Then, after a moment's thought, she extended her hand, stripped his magical resistance, and blasted Revalion with shadow energy. Black lightning crackled around him and he instantly died. Then, just as quickly, he was alive and hyperventilating. Then he died again, and came back. And again, and again, and again, quicker and quicker until the cracks of her magic following each other sounded like a steady hum.

Eventually she tired of that and let the Aspect live, shrinking herself back to normal. "Oh, and what was it those drakes were telling you about?" she asked the panting, heaving dragon.

He threw up, and she turned the vomit to… hmm, red wine as it came out, coating the floor. "My patience is very limited," she warned, idly slamming his Blue slave into the pillars repeatedly.

"A hidden camp," he stammered. "Of mortals, trying to resist you. I didn't say anything because I didn't want to imply your worships were unaware of them – "

She cut him off, saying, "Correct, we are aware of them. Continue." She changed the red wine into fire ants and let go of the Blue dragon.

He eyed the skittering insects warily, but didn't dare breathe twilight flame on them in Sara's presence. Not that she'd have minded. " – but my Skyterrors were reporting that they're preparing a raid on a qiraji mine to free the slaves and we were planning on stopping them, master."

Now that Sara was unaware of. She casually changed her avatar into that of a dwarven man. "Is that so?" he asked. "Well, ignore it. I'll go deal with it. I've been meaning to check up on them anyway." Far off, another part of its consciousness finished strangling an unlucky gnome to death with its tentacles. It debated reviving him, but instead just ate the soul and sent the body to the bottom of the sea.

"Understood, my lord," Revalion said, bowing lowly.

"Excellent. Carry on." Suddenly his eyes were empty caverns, ringed with gaping fangs that dripped with some unknowable fluid. "Don't forget what I told you here today," he intoned lowly before shattering the avatar with the sound of forks on glass.


Davren Firestorm

Their camp was filled with the muted hum of people going back and forth, stockpiling and checking. The fluorescent rocks providing their cave light shimmered on the walls, bathing them in scarlet light. In the middle of it their leader, the forsaken man Torrow Villes, was busy coordinating the last of their preparations. Davren watched from the sidelines.

"Sixty-two holy amulets?" the undead asked warily.

"Sixty -four, sir!" the kaldorei woman corrected, handing over a box. "Exactly as you requested."

"Excellent," Torrow said, sending her off and handing the box to one of his subordinates. He turned to someone else, a troll mage. "Ration conjuration?"

"A little behind, mon," the other man said with a frown. "Ley lines shifted away this mornin'."

Torrow cursed quietly. "Alright, then try to catch up, at all costs. We'll be having a lot of visitors." He turned to a pandaren woman. "Mindwipe pills ready?"

She held up a filthy glass box, within which were over a dozen small, vibrating orbs of arcane magic. "All set, sir."

"Wonderful." Now Torrow turned to him, yellow eyes piercing through his soul. "Davren, is your team ready to move?"

He nodded grimly. "As ready as we'll ever be." Davren couldn't help a shiver going down his spine. This was incredibly dangerous... but it had to be done. They couldn't keep squatting in this hole forever.

"Excellent. Gather them here, it's time to begin."

Davren nodded and walked away from Torrow. He pushed through their camp, slipping between passing lines of people until he reached the far side of their cave. His team was no more than half a dozen strong, including himself. It included a human man, who'd been a farmer. A pandaren monk, even an ice troll woman, and many more. Their mission was as simple as it was dangerous. Infiltrate a qiraji compound and rescue the slaves within.

"Torrow says it's time," he announced to them where they sat in a huddle, eating their conjured rations. They were already geared up, which was not saying much. There were no tailors anymore, no supplies of thread and wool. All the clothing and equipment they had was what they'd had before the Rise of the Old Gods. Months into their reign, they had little more than rags and battered armor, the heaviest of which was chain mail. Meanwhile their enemies had the full power of not one, but two eldritch deities behind them. They weren't going to win any fights anytime soon. "He's got the supplies all set up for us at the east, let's go!"

The atmosphere was heavy and tense as the six of them geared up. Mindwipe pellets in case they got captured by the enemy. Whatever enchanted clothing they could find. Spiritual ankhs and holy candles. Rations, all blessed by the Holy Light. They strapped everything onto their backs in large, brown leather backpacks. Their portal expert - the ice troll woman, Karika - went over the coordinates for their camp's anchor one last time. It was a tricky one, because it kept moving as their little bubble of shelter was jostled around the globe.

Within an hour, it was all set. They huddled together, gnomish cloaking generators distributed among them. "We ready?" Davren asked. His five subordinates nodded. "Alright, then let's move. We all know what to do. Run in, get them, portal out. Easy as that." He brought his hands together and began to fashion a Mass Teleport. Arcane light pooled in his hands and filled the air with ozone. Around them, the remaining four dozen of their group knelt and offered them their last prayers. Then the spell in his hands took form, and the six of them were yanked upwards, through stone and dirt and filth, to the surface of Azeroth.

He had no idea what to expect. The landscape kept changing. For all they knew, they'd arrive at the bottom of the ocean. But they needed to rescue someone, anyone. It wasn't a trip of pure altruism. Those who had been taken in by the Old Gods' servants could possibly know their weakness. They were desperate, they'd take anything!

But Davren wasn't getting his hopes up.

He braced himself as he reappeared... but nothing could have prepared him for the furnace blast of heat. His eyes were treated to what Azeroth had become, and he couldn't keep his jaw from dropping. The sky was pitch black, and the stars were a chaotic rainbow of colors. The White Lady and Blue Child seemed... larger than he remembered. Clouds covered the sky like a transparent quilt, the color of dried blood. The ground beneath their feet was black obsidian, threatening to crack like glass beneath their shoes. Davren took a look around and his heart sank lower still.

They stood on an island of black stone, covered in strange, bright yellow growths the size of a house that looked almost fungal. Around their island the dark ocean rushed like a waterfall of oil, spraying them with scalding freshwater. And connected to their island was an enormous construct. It was black and dark green metal, shaped like a pyramid with its top sliced off and replaced with towering spires. From so far away, he could see enormous insectoid creatures standing on top, their claws raised to the bloody sky in praise.

Silently, Davren gestured to his comrades and pointed towards it. They nodded and, crouched low to the ground as if they weren't invisible to anyone outside their group, they crept forward.

From one side of the pyramid, a colossal chain came out. The construct floated in the searing ocean, seemingly heedless of the rushing water. The chain secured it to their island, and it was so enormous it could easily fit all six of them with room to spare. So, obviously, they were going to climb it.

They got in line and, step by step, climbed up the chain. Its green, twisting metal hurt to look at for long, and the constant spray of the now-freezing saltwater stung Davren's eyes. On the horizon, he saw an approaching wall of pitch black clouds crackling with nonstop lightning, filling the tepid air with ozone even from so far away. He gulped, then nearly fell off when the earth quaked. A glance behind him showed a mountain raising up from the ocean at a jawdropping rate. Stone and sand flowed upwards like water in reverse. The mountain punctured through the skies.

He shook his head and gestured for everyone else to move forward. "We can't stop for anything," he mouthed. "Keep going."

Not soon enough, they reached the end of the chain and were deposited at the very top of the construction. It vibrated under his feet as it continued to endure the waves... then suddenly fell silent as the ocean stopped moving. In its place, a gale wind picked up and nearly blew him off his feet with gusts of scorching, dry air that reeked of mold and death, so putrid he nearly threw up. But they were on top, with qiraji and mantid chanting filthy, unknowable words around him.

He found a way down, a steep ramp that lead into a hole in the earth. Silent as the grave, they approached it and slid down the black metal that - as Alenn found out - burned to the touch no matter the temperature. Good thing they had shoes.

Inside, it was nearly too dark to see. The only light came from glowing yellow sacks on the walls, which he dared not look closely at. His heart hammered in his chest as the wind continued to howl outside. The tainted metal beneath his feet seemed to squirm hungrily, eager for his leather shoes to wear away so it could get at his tender flesh. The qiraji patrolled the halls. Eerily humanoid battleguards, towering gladiators, and at one point he even saw a prophet, dressed in robes and giving a sermon to a crowd of bowing battleguards and mantid. In its magic were suspended various prisoners. He didn't want to look any closer.

Screams echoed through the halls as they went deeper and deeper. As they searched for anyone they could free, they passed by several open rooms in which they saw... by the Sun, such horrible things. A mantid, kneeling over the body of a tauren man that was peeled open. The bull was still alive and frozen in place. Holding pens where people lay in squalor, starved to twigs and twitching as they laid, nearly naked, on the black metal. Sacrifices slowly suffocating, held not at their necks but at their souls by towering faceless ones. He saw other things too, each worse than the last. The Old Gods were evidently as creative as they were cruel.

Davren's blood ran cold in his veins. The lump in his throat was far too large to swallow. They went deeper and deeper, the stench and heat and all around awfulness lingering wherever they tried to go. They just needed some people they could break out. Just a few. Then this would all be worth it.

Karika ran in front of him and held up her hands. He stopped, and so did the other four. She pointed to his left, and he followed her finger. His gaze fell upon another ramp, going deep into the earth. It was worth a shot.

He took the lead and led them into it, plunging further down. The black metal continued wrapping around them, occasionally punctured by a luminous sack or a glowing crystal that gave him a killer headache just being around, nevermind looking at. The ramp came to another cell, but this one was something they could work with. For starters there wasn't any guard, and the reason for that was evident. All the prisoners, malnourished to the extreme, were bound in the black metal. Shackles around their wrists, ankles, necks, leading to chains that hooked into the walls. Limbs spread so tight he thought they'd pop off and by the Light it gets worse the more I look stop looking stop looking!

"Slow and steady," he mouthed. "Be patient, don't mess this up."

Urven, the local draenei shaman, put a hand on his shoulder. "We can't break the chains without making a lot of noise," he mouthed.

Davren nodded. "Then we'll teleport them out of the chains. Karika, can you set up the portal? I'll get them out. First, everyone get to someone and get ready to extend the invisibility." There were eight prisoners here. A bit more than he'd expected to find, but nothing they couldn't handle. There was a human man, with dirtied blonde hair and muted blue eyes, staring into the distance. A human woman, with brown hair and brown eyes and a permanent scowl affixed to her tortured features. A goblin, an orc, even a tuskarr...

He came next to the human man, who kept staring vacantly, twitching slightly as the metal bands burned his soul. He raised three fingers, counted down to two, one, zero!

Davren's fingers tapped the engineering mechanism wrapped around his waist. With six muted flashes of arcane light, the prisoners became invisible and, as such, able to see them.

They screamed. Or at least they tried, but no sound came of their vocal cords as they jolted weakly within their shackles. Davren approached the human man and held a finger to his lips. "Shh," he whispered as quietly as possible, glancing over his shoulders to check for guards. "Shh. We're getting you out of here. We've got a portal set up. I need to teleport you out of those chains first." Davren held up his hands and began to pool arcane light. "Hold still."

Anxiety tingled throughout his body. They were so close, but this was by far the most touch-and-go part of the mission. The part where they had the greatest chance of being exposed. Breathing was shallow and nerves were tense as, one by one, Davren teleported the prisoners out of their shackles, where his team would do whatever they could to get them off the burning floor. The human man started sobbing. The brown haired woman just silently glared at everyone. The goblin started shaking violently for a few terrifying seconds. Davren tried not to look too closely at their bodies, at the bony ribs and mutilated scars...

For what must've been the hundredth time, he nearly threw up.

Finally, the last of the prisoners was free. "Karika," he mouthed, picking up the human woman in his arms like a newborn. Sun, she was so light... "Get us out of here!"

The troll nodded and brought her hands together to start preparing her spell. They gathered around her, holding their breaths. Could it be? Were they actually about to pull this off?

A gaping wound opened in the fabric of reality. The bright blue portal was a welcome sight in the dark and dreary caverns, even if he couldn't see where it was leading. That was normal ever since the Old Gods broke out. One by one they filed in, with Davren entering last, the woman trembling weakly in his arms and trying to claw his skin. He walked through the portal and was flung through the Nether. The arcane winds jostled around him, threatening to toss him and his cargo into the void between worlds, but then his vision cleared and he was back in camp, safe.

Holy shit. They actually did it.

What came next was a blur. Healers crowded in around them, taking the former prisoners out of their arms. There was food and water provided, medical attention, ragged screams, healing magic, and an incredible amount of sobbing all around. Poor things. He couldn't imagine what they went through, nor did he want to. Eventually, Davren retired to his bed, which was not much more than a square of the ground cleared away for him to sleep on. It was just rocks, but even so he fell fast asleep.

His nightmares woke him up no less than five times that 'night'.

The next day went by as most of them had, except with the addition of eight traumatized prisoners. The woman he'd rescued kept staring at him, too. Beyond that, it was business as usual. Help conjure food and water maintain the air and dispose of waste, pray to the Light for shelter and watch as the shamans pray to the elementals to keep them safe. Talk to people, tell stories, play games, and try to keep boredom at bay. Except now also contribute his meager medical knowledge, sit idly by as their priests did their best to help with the mental trauma. No information yet about any Old God weaknesses, but they had to be patient.

It was excruciatingly slow going.

A week later, it was time for lunch. All sixty-two of them gathered in the center of the stony pocket, bathing in dim red light. The meal was conjured water in leather flasks and conjured biscuits that had all the nutritional value they needed, which also meant they tasted like paper. But while Devran was used to choking it down, the former prisoners - Tamusk, Sarah, Prisleon, Jameson, and so forth - devoured it like it was the best food they'd had in months. Probably was, poor bastards.

At least they were doing better. They stopped jumping at every shadow, stopped randomly screaming and twitching. Davren scanned the group, his breathing slow and steady. Then, someone laughed.

Sarah's eyes all at once glowed brilliant orange. She gasped and was hoisted into the air, clutching at her throat and frozen as if time had stopped. So did Tamusk, Prisleon, every one of the prisoners... except Jameson, the human man he'd freed first.

Everyone gasped in panic and backed away as Jameson laughed. His half-starved body filled out. His rags of clothing became ornate brown robes, and the whites of his eyes turned orange, his iris and pupil melting into a brown disk. He floated into the air, looking down at them.

Davren's heart froze.

"Did you really think," Jameson began. "That you were hiding from us? That we somehow didn't know?"

No. No, no no no. He didn't want to be taken. He didn't want to be subjected to whatever the prisoners had been.

'Jameson' continued speaking, his words impossible to drown out and ignore. "I suppose I have to give you some credit. I'd never have expected you to do something quite this daring." He rubbed his hands together. "Unpredictable. Unforeseeable. I love it! But hey! Just make an avatar, some retroactive memory alteration, and nobody's the wiser." He glowered. "You've some nerve trying to take my belongings from me, you know. Especially to try and find a way to... what? Defeat us? Not possible, unless you have a Titan army just lying around. But..." He shrugged. "I, Yogg-Saron, am in a good mood. You've really surprised me, and I can't wait to see what you'll cook up next. So I'll let you off with a warning." Davren's jaw dropped. Yogg-Saron. That human was an actual Old God taking mortal form. They'd drawn the attention of the Fiend of a Thousand Faces.

Then, with a clap of thunder, the other mortals dropped to the ground and Jameson was gone.

Dead silence.

Then, the Old God avatar returned with a shadow nova, looking... tired. "Changed my mind." His voice turned to ice, and brilliant green magic wrapped around his hands. "Goodbye."

Necrotic power surged forth and wrapped around Davren. He conjured a mana shield, but it shattered instantly. The energy wrapped around him and he gasped in pain. Then he was... he was...

He wasn't.


Yogg-Saron

It rubbed a crusher tentacle against its true head, growling lowly. Ugh. This was stupid. It should've kept them around. Just because it could act on its every impulse didn't mean it had to. Now their souls were destroyed, gone forever. They wouldn't be coming back.

Maybe it could make a few mortals to take their place. Throw them in a hole in the ground, give them false memories, have them do what they would. But then it would know what they'd do, wouldn't it? It'd be able to predict their decisions and conflicts and... it was seriously thinking about creating mortals just for them to be free of it.

Stupid. All of it.

Yogg-Saron shook those thoughts off. Who cared? There were plenty of other things left to surprise it besides a few dust motes that thought their 'spirit' and 'indomitable will' would avail them. Puzzles by Tsa'Thannon. Sermons by the qiraji and mantid, watchgates to distant stars and planets, the list went on. For the time being, Yogg-Saron's tendrils began to wave around in the air, summoning vast arcane magic. After a moment, there was a phenomenal CRACK as Yogg-Saron vanished from Azeroth and air began rushing in to fill the void it left behind.

The Lucid Dream reappeared in the Twisting Nether. Rivers of arcane and shadow, colored every color of the rainbow and several outside the visible spectrum, flowed around it. Magical currents coiled around Yogg-Saron's body, which it inhaled through its millions of mouths, tasting and drinking. There was no gravity, there was no heaviness to its body. Distant stars twinkled morosely.

It sighed through its true head. What was it even worried about? That less than sixty-five mortals were dead? It killed thousands of times that just getting out of its prison! They were expendable and useless. Even if every one of the Titan-born went extinct and they didn't create more, who cared? Before the Titans came along the Old Gods had created their own servants and slaves. The n'raqi and aqir were just the latest in a long, long line of minions who were created and, when they grew boring, wiped out. They'd also created lesser servants, who multiplied rapidly and were susceptible to different tortures in different ways, many times.

Yogg-Saron didn't need the orcs and trolls, the elves and dwarves, the draenei and humans. It had half a mind to return to Azeroth and wipe them out to the last at this very second. Tsa'Thannon wouldn't mind. Unpredictable change was what they were all about! It could prove it was just as much an Old God as it had ever been, that a reincarnation cycle hadn't dulled its edge.

No, no that was all wrong. It had nothing to prove. The whole point of their rule was to have nothing to prove, to do what they wanted and be beholden to no standards.

Yogg-Saron curled its tendrils around itself, drifting in the nether. It'd return to Azeroth in a while, keeping tabs on the planet with its magic. For the time being it needed to be separate physically.

This was ridiculous! It had everything it wanted! Why was it acting so childish? Everything was fine, it had a good 'friend' that actually understood it, legions of souls, great food, great fun and...

... it distracted itself by stargazing, forcibly ending the line of thought.

It could worry about this later.


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